Remembering Thomas Berry
He died this past Monday, June 1, 2009. He was 94.
I had the great benefit of having spent a brief time in dialogue with Thomas. I learned that he was brilliant, clear about his role and the place of his contributions, yet personally modest. He was a towering figure, as I said earlier this week in a note to a friend, a generous soul, and a heck of a guy sort of like the universe whose story he so presciently unfolded for us.
His time among us is over, but his work, I think, was done. (It seems to me he planned things well.) Our debt to him, as sustainability activists, is immense and far-reaching. Thanks to him and Miriam MacGillis, his friend and interpreter, I actually think I have some idea of what I’m doing. Here is a paragraph from the last page of his final book, aptly and poetically named Evening Thoughts, published in 2006…
“As a final reflection, I would suggest that we see these early years of the twenty-first century as the period when we discover the great community of the Earth, a comprehensive community of all the living and nonliving components of the planet. We are just discovering that the human project is itself a component of the Earth project, that our intimacy with the Earth is our way of intimacy with each other. Such are the foundations of our journey into the future.”
Ralph
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